Supply of hospice services strongly associated with local area's median household income

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added 5/10/2011

Ann Arbor - Wealth, population size, race and age associate with the supply of hospice care available in a county, according to
a study published in the
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management this month.

Local availability is an important predictor of use of hospice programs, which are end-of-life services that have been shown to improve
pain control, maintain patients' independence and even extend life, says lead author Maria Silveira, M.D., M.P.H., of the Veterans
Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System and assistant professor in the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of Michigan.

This study is the first to examine geographic variation in the supply of hospice services and its association with community wealth.

The researchers found that for every $1,000 increase in median household income in a county, the supply of hospice services increased by 3%.

Hospice supply also was larger in counties with larger populations, more African Americans and people over the age of 65.

But hospice supply decreased in larger geographic counties and those with more Hispanic residents.

More research is needed, says Silveira and her co-authors, but these study results indicate the traditional model for structuring and
financing hospice needs to be re-designed. The building of community hospices is often funded through charity and this is one possible
explanation for the disparities seen in the study.

"Wealthy communities can afford large amounts of charitable giving and thus have the resources to build local hospices; whereas poorer
communities may not be able to donate in the amounts necessary to do the same," says Silveira.

While the amount of hospice use has increased tremendously in the last twenty years, most Americans die without using hospice care. In
2002, only 28.6 percent of Medicare beneficiaries who died had enrolled in hospice.

To improve the feasibility of hospice in poorer communities, Silveira and her co-authors suggest that Medicare provide assistance or
incentives for building hospices in poorer communities, in addition to making sure that reimbursement for hospice services match its cost.

"Since most hospice care in the US is paid for with public funds via Medicare- the government has a responsibility to ensure that access to
hospice is equitable," says Silveira.

Silveira and her co-authors stressed that more research is needed to find out how patient preferences Influence access to hospice by
underserved communities.

"The relationship between community affluence and supply of hospice services could reflect community values about hospice and indicate
that hospice, as a business, merely follows the demand for its services," Silveira says.

Additional authors: Susan Goold, M.D., M.P.H., M.A. VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System and professor in the U-M departments of Internal
Medicine and Health Management and Policy; Lawrence F. McMahon, M.D., M.P.H., chief of the U-M Division of General Medicine and professor
in the departments of Internal Medicine and Health Management and Policy; Stephen Connor, Ph.D. of the National Hospice and Palliative
Care Organization; and Chris Feudtner, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H. of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.